Short-scale Les Paul style guitar?

The original shortscale guitars; Mustangs, Duo-Sonics, Musicmasters, Jaguars, Broncos, Jag-stang, Jagmaster, Super-Sonic, Cyclone, and Toronados.

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mountain2012
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Short-scale Les Paul style guitar?

Post by mountain2012 »

Can someone please direct me to one?

Seen any short SGs around?
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Post by Bacchus »

There was the Jaguar HH with a stop tailpiece. Doesn't look at all Les Pauley, and it's bolt on. But it is most of the way there. It's been discontinued, but you might find one.

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paul_
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Post by paul_ »

Do an Chiquita

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Thomas
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Post by Thomas »

A Les Paul is short scale. How short are you talking? They made a shorter scale Gibson Melody maker too. You don't find them often though.
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Fakir Mustache
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Post by Fakir Mustache »

I think a couple of companies made mini Les Pauls:
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otherwise Gibson themselves made some 22.75" instruments in the 1950s and 1960s, they're going to be expensive though:
http://www.vintageguitar.com/3710/gibson-les-paul-special-34/
I remember seeing others than the Special in the article, they also had hollow bodies and Melody Makers.
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Post by paul_ »

Thomas wrote:A Les Paul is short scale. How short are you talking?
Probably shorter than one of the two commonly accepted "standard" scale lengths for an electric guitar like 24.75"
Aug wrote:which one of you bastards sent me an ebay question asking if you can get teh kurdtz with that 64 mustang? :x
robertOG wrote:fran & paul are some of the original gangstas of the JS days when you'd have to say "phuck"
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Post by robroe »

a shortscale guitar is fucking 24" OR LIKE 22.X

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Post by ultratwin »

...or shorter. Real deal shortscaling here...I was about to post about LP-shaped TOMO Electric Ukuleles, and oops too late.


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Post by Jagtornado »

Thomas wrote:A Les Paul is short scale. How short are you talking? They made a shorter scale Gibson Melody maker too. You don't find them often though.
I think he means 24 inch
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Post by 71Smallbox »

I just don't get it.
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Post by sunshiner »

Gibson's real scale is 24.562", for some reasons they have been declared it as 24.75" (MIC Epiphones have real length of 24.75"). Difference between Mustang and Les Paul, while playing, may not be noticed, if nobody tells you that one fretboard is shorter than another. The term "shortscale" is the inside term for the exact company, like 24" is the shortscale for the standard scale of 25.5" for Fender, while the"full" 25.5" scale is shorter than the traditional scale of classical guitar which is 25.6". Gibson used to have 3/4 scale of 24.562" and Birdland that used to have the regular scale minus the first fret.

Fender used to have wider range of shortscale models, so yeah, shortscale means either 24" or 22".
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Post by MattK »

sunshiner wrote:Difference between Mustang and Les Paul, while playing, may not be noticed, if nobody tells you that one fretboard is shorter than another.
Surely the crippling pain in the left shoulder would give the Les Paul away.
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Post by Fakir Mustache »

NickD wrote: Fri Mar 25, 2022 11:44 pm
plopswagon wrote: Fri Mar 25, 2022 7:05 pm Fuck! My car runs on Tubes!
When you press the accelerator past halfway it doesn’t actually go any faster, but the engine noise distorts
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Post by dren68 »

There's also the Am. Special Mustang. I think it's been discontinued, but you can probably find a used one.


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Post by honeyiscool »

PRS makes a great one, the 245 (24.5" scale). They're usually light and the PRS SE 245 is quite affordable at $499. You just have to get over the stigma of having a PRS*.

http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/SEStd245VC



* Yes, I have one, but mine doesn't have bird inlays.
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